UK educational tour

Aida 2022-03-22 09:02:11

Wild Child tells the story of a California girl, poopy moore, who was forcibly sent to a British girls' high school by her father. It is a complete conflict between American culture and British traditional culture. After reading it, I feel that the British are still quite literate, and they seem to be a little conservative. For Americans, English people are more like their elders, and they have a very rational feeling for people and things, which is different from the openness of the United States. Culture is based on the promotion of individuality. Americans focus more on practicality, while the British seem to focus more on inner self-recognition, as Mrs Kingsley, the principal of Abbey Mount School in the play, told poopy: "This school has produced absolutely nobody. of notes. Our leading light was the girl who was Princess Diana's foot doctor. So, if you aim is to make the people of Us Weekly, then this isn't the place for you. What we do produce are smart, independent, free -thinking, good-hearted who remain friends for life!" (This school produces no-ones, and our guiding light is the girl who was a pedicure for Princess Diana. So if you're going to be able to go to America Weekly character, you're in the wrong place, but we do create smart, independent, free-thinking, kind girls who will be friends in life!), from this point of view, the British are confident, The school's education is also very successful. They know what kind of person they are, what kind of thing they are suitable for, and what kind of achievement they can make in the end. To tap a person's potential is the main purpose of British education. It is no wonder that a European island country can once become an empire on which the sun never sets. It has its national advantages and is worthy of learning from other countries and nations. .

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Extended Reading

Wild Child quotes

  • [Repeated line]

    Harriet: Me thinks.

    CharlotteJane: [Both, together] We think so, too.

  • Kate: [after looking at all of the bottles of water in Poppy's trunk] Erm... Why?

    Poppy: What? I might get thirsty!

    Kate: You know, in England, we have this amazing thing - it's called a tap.

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